ChatterBank1 min ago
What Will Labour Promise Next ?
28 Answers
http:// news.sk y.com/s tory/11 45724/m iliband -labour -would- freeze- energy- prices
Well according to labour we will be having free healthcare, businesses will have hardly any rates and now energy prices will be frozen.
Do they really think the public is that stupid?
Well according to labour we will be having free healthcare, businesses will have hardly any rates and now energy prices will be frozen.
Do they really think the public is that stupid?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by youngmafbog. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.we need a credible opposition.... Ed Milliband & co are not it, Did anyone notice when he was doing his spiel about giving 16/17 year olds the vote the crowd behind him were all youngsters nodding like puppets. So contrived, so many sound bites (Ed - we deserve better than that!!) and sycophants everywhere!! Ed Balls to come, telling us how the economy should be run!!!!!
Freezing business rates is not the same thing as "hardly any rates". Or do you approve of hiking up business rates?
And I for one would welcome a much more vigorous intervention into the shadowed world of energy price tariffs by the big 6. The pledge lasts for only 20 months which is not long enough in my opinion.
These energy companies have made pretty enormous profits, largely deflecting attention away from that by claiming such price hikes are necessary for "infrastructure development". But I have my doubts. Any measures that restrict price hikes and force the energy companies to be much more transparent in their pricing policy should be welcomed by everyone.
I do have issues with the claim about 200,000 new houses a year though; Labour pledged it before but were unable to deliver. In fact it has been undeliverable for decades. Only when you had large state sector involvement in the shape of local councils and council housing was that achieved.
And I for one would welcome a much more vigorous intervention into the shadowed world of energy price tariffs by the big 6. The pledge lasts for only 20 months which is not long enough in my opinion.
These energy companies have made pretty enormous profits, largely deflecting attention away from that by claiming such price hikes are necessary for "infrastructure development". But I have my doubts. Any measures that restrict price hikes and force the energy companies to be much more transparent in their pricing policy should be welcomed by everyone.
I do have issues with the claim about 200,000 new houses a year though; Labour pledged it before but were unable to deliver. In fact it has been undeliverable for decades. Only when you had large state sector involvement in the shape of local councils and council housing was that achieved.
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